Title: Academic Promotion for ClinicianEducators
1Academic Promotion for Clinician-Educators
- Paul A. Hemmer, Col, USAF, MC
- Professor of Medicine
- Vice Chairman for Educational Programs Uniformed
Services University - October 2008
2Acknowledgements, etc.
- Louis Pangaro, MD
- Professor and Chairman, DOM
- phemmer_at_usuhs.mil
- http//senate.usuhs.mil/senate.html
- Academic Medicine September, 2000
3Disclaimer
- These slides provide an overview of academic
promotion in the Clinician-Educator Pathway - Individual faculty members should review the 1100
document, and review expectations and develop
plans with Departmental leadership (Division
Directors, Vice Chairman, and/or Chairman)
4Goals
- Define Clinician-Educators (CE)
- USU model for CE promotion
- Scholarship for CE
- Summary
5USU Model for CEsReview of USU 1100
- Tracks
- Expectations
- Scholarship, Teaching, Prof Service, Citizenship
- Pathways/Ranks
- Promotion Criteria
- Process for Appointment and Promotion
- What You Should Do
http//senate.usuhs.mil/senate.html WRAMC
Medicine S drive subfolder
6Moving from Asst to Assoc ProfClinician-Educator,
Non-Tenure
Assoc Prof
Supporting
Basics
Scholarship
- Documentation of Teaching Roles
- List of work/products
- Pubs, Materials
- Letters
- 2 internal (DOM)
- 1-2 External
- Portfolios
- Teaching
- Level 2
- Application
- Diligence/excellence in pt care
- Prof Service
- Institution/broader
- Citizenship
- gt 4yrs clinical teaching
- Excellence Teacher
- Innovation/Reputation beyond Institution
Asst Prof
7Moving from Associate to ProfessorClinician-Educa
tor, Non-Tenure
Prof
Supporting
Basics
Scholarship
- Documentation of Teaching Roles
- List of work/products
- Pubs, Materials
- Letters
- 5 letters
- Portfolios
- Outstanding achievement in Teaching (Level 3)
and Application - Dissemination of work
- Close review of writings and professional
communication - Evidence of community impact
- gt 3 yrs as Associate
- Substantial contribution (papers, texts)
- International Reputation
- Recognition (editorial positions, visiting prof)
Assoc Prof
8Faculty Tracks
- Tenure civilian, full-time
- Non-tenure uniformed, some civilian
-
9Pathways in Non-tenure Track
- Clinician-Investigator
- Education, Research, Clinical, Prof service
- Clinician-Educator
- Education, Clinical, Professional service
- Research prefix focus science
10PathwaysClinician-Investigator
- In addition to documentation of research
activities, individuals in this pathway must be
an integral component of the departments
clinical and teaching programs.
11005.5.1
11PathwaysClinician-Educator
- must be an integral component of the
departments clinical and teaching
programsencouraged to assume administrative
responsibility for medical education and related
clinical are activities
11005.5.2
12ExpectationsQualifications for Faculty Membership
- Scholarship
- Peer Review
- Teaching
- Professional Service
- Institutional Citizenship
13Scholarship (Boyer)
- Discovery (original, disciplined research)
- Integration (innovative thinking which combines
and connects various disciplines) - Teaching (communicates understanding)
- Application (engagement with society, building
bridges between theory and practice)
Scholarship Reconsidered Priorities for the
Professorship, Carnegie Foundation, 1990.
14Scholarship in TeachingFincher R. et.al. Acad
Med. 200075887-94.
- Teachingcan be scholarly if appropriate
evidence is presented to show that defined
standards have been met. - Products Web-based materials, textbook
publications, curriculum units or teaching
modules, CME presentations, curricular change,
community education - Challenge provide the evidence its scholarly
15Elusiveness of Scholarship of TeachingGlassick
CE. Acad Med. 200075877-90.
- To be scholarship, work (teaching) must
- Be made public
- Be available for peer review and critique
according to accepted standards - Be able to be reproduced and built on by other
scholars
Schulman L. The Scholarship of Teaching.
Change. 199931(5)11.
16Peer Recognition of Scholarly Activity (1)
- original manuscripts, review articles, case
reports, books, chapters - principal authorship or significant contribution
to position papers, field manuals, practice
guidelines - patent applications
- acquisition of external funding
11007.2.1
17Peer Recognition of Scholarly Activity (2)
- invited presentations (meetings, other
institutions) - institutional utilization of educational
materials - service on study sections, research review
boards, editorial boards, reviewer
11007.2.1
18Peer Recognition of Scholarly Activity (3)
- election to learned societies, organizational
awards - selection as military specialty consultant
- selection as teaching chief, residency director,
educational director
11007.2.1
19Expectations Qualifications for Faculty
Membership
- Scholarship
- Peer Review
- Teaching
- Professional Service
- Institutional Citizenship
20Teaching
- Level 1
- Individual Classroom, Departmental
- Level 2
- Institutional Teaching
- Grand rounds at other institutions, regional CME,
new curriculum, course/residency director - Level 3
- Disseminated, well-recognized
- Beyond parent institution
- Publications, grants, visiting scholar, national
educational activities (RRC, re-certification)
11007.3
21Professional Service
- Scholarship of Application
- Service to uniformed service, fed depts
- Professional, Educational, Scientific, or
community organizations at local, state,
national, or international levels
- Common Aspect of Scholarship of Application
- Dissemination of useful, testable, reproducible
information to others
22Institutional Citizenship
- Administrative, committee involvement
23Faculty Ranks, Promotion
24Faculty Ranks
- Teaching Fellow
- Instructor
- Assistant Professor
- Associate Professor
- Professor
25Assistant Professor
- Full-time staff physicians (including GIM Fellows
and Chief Residents) - Active participation in core teaching
- Precepting, attending on general medicine ward,
student in clinic, ICMs - Recommendation of Chief
- Structured CV
- http//www.usuhs.mil/med/sampleCV.htm
26Associate Professor of Medicine (Non-Tenure,
Clinician Educator)
- Criteria for assistant professor PLUS
- Sustained involvement in clinical teaching (gt 4
years, 7 typical) - Documented excellence as teacher
- Innovation, reputation in education evidence of
an established reputation beyond the parent
institution
27Associate Professor of Medicine (Non-Tenure,
Clinician Educator)
- Scholarship of Teaching Level Two,
extra-mural - Grand rounds at other institutions, regional CME,
new curriculum, course/residency director - Scholarship of Application diligence and
excellence in patient care - clinical knowledge
and humanistic skills should be described in
supporting letters
28Associate Professor of Medicine (Non-Tenure,
Clinician Educator)
- Professional service institution and broader
- Institutional Citizenship
- Leadership of or major contributions to SOM
and/or their hospital committees
29Professor
- Outstanding achievement in the two areas of
scholarship - Dissemination of their work through a close
evaluation of their professional writings and
other forms of professional communicationevidence
of community impact
30Professor
- Criteria for associate professor PLUS
- Greater contribution to field (papers, texts)
- Letters (non-tenure 5 tenure 6)
- International reputation
- Recognition (editorial positions, visiting
professorships)
31Appointment ProcessAssistant Professor
- Physician Discusses with Hospital Chief
- Preparation of CV
- Recommendation to Chair, DOM, USUHS by Hospital
Chief , or - Recommendation by USUHS Clerkship/Course Director
- Approval by Hospital Commander
- Chair submits to Dean
32Promotion ProcessAssociate Professor and
Professor
- Initiation (individual or dept review)
- DOM Executive Committee Review
- Productivity, time in grade
- Candidates Responsibility
- References and personal statement
- Chairs Responsibility
- Collate for CAPT, Board of Regents
33Supporting Materials (1)
- Documentation of teaching roles
- quantity
- quality
- level (designing and planning)
- List of written work, products
- publications
- curricular materials
34Supporting Materials (2)
- Letters of Support
- internal (2) and external (1-2)
- Portfolios
- teaching (critiques, awards)
- documents of mentoring (abstracts)
- curricular materials
35Teaching Portfolio
- Awards and citations
- Recommendations for awards
- Educational products, materials
- Clinical projects - what role did you play?
- Copies of articles, abstracts
11007.3.1
36Teaching Portfolio (2)
- Critiques of teaching (peer and student)
- Courses taught, curricular materials
- Electronic teaching materials/simulations
- Individuals mentored
11007.3.1
37Moving from Asst to Assoc ProfClinician-Educator,
Non-Tenure
Assoc Prof
Supporting
Basics
Scholarship
- Documentation of Teaching Roles
- List of work/products
- Pubs, Materials
- Letters
- 2 internal (DOM)
- 1-2 External
- Portfolios
- Teaching
- Level 2
- Application
- Diligence/excellence in pt care
- Prof Service
- Institution/broader
- Citizenship
- gt 4yrs clinical teaching
- Excellence Teacher
- Innovation/Reputation beyond Institution
Asst Prof
38Moving from Associate to ProfessorClinician-Educa
tor, Non-Tenure
Prof
Supporting
Basics
Scholarship
- Documentation of Teaching Roles
- List of work/products
- Pubs, Materials
- Letters
- 5 letters
- Portfolios
- Outstanding achievement in Teaching (Level 3)
and Application - Dissemination of work
- Close review of writings and professional
communication - Evidence of community impact
- gt 3 yrs as Associate
- Substantial contribution (papers, texts)
- International Reputation
- Recognition (editorial positions, visiting prof)
Assoc Prof
39What Should You Do?
- Choose a Track(s)/Pathway
- Choose an Area for Productivity
- Find a Mentor
- Keep a Portfolio (Document EVERYTHING)
- Seek Responsibility
- institutional
- national organizations
40Steps You Can Take
- Look at the APT document (1100)
- http//www.usuhs.mil/asd/1100SOM.pdfhttp//www.us
uhs.mil/asd/1100.pdf - Decide your strengths, interests
- cluster your CV
- Pick projects, collaborators
- Allocate 1/2 day twice a month
41Organize Your CV
- Keep current (and dated)
- Keep headings clear
- Group your activities
- Separate publications by type
- Delete old abstracts?
- Dont list your CME!
- http//www.usuhs.mil/med/sampleCV.htm
42Id be glad to help!
43WRAMC Medicine S DriveUSU Appt Promotion Tenure
Documentsphemmer_at_usuhs.mil
44(No Transcript)
45Promotion Criteria for CEsJGIM 200318711-716
- Survey of DOM Chairs 82 response
- What do Chairs emphasize for CEs?
- Teaching Skills (awards, trainee evals)
- Clinical Skills (peer/trainee evals)
- Agrees with Promotion Cte Chairs
- Expected publications 5
- Make it count twice--Levinson
Beasley BW, Wright SW. JAMA 1997278723-28
46Promotion Criteria for CEsDOM Chair
recommendations
- Document/track ALL activities
- Achieve reputation for excellence
- Publish all scholarly activity
- Mentor set and meet goals
- Develop area of expertise
- Be involved in research
- Get involved in promotion process
- Develop curricula or other educ projects
47Looking Forward to PromotionProspective Study of
Promotion in AcademiaJGIM 200318705-10
- 183 assistant professors in DOMs
- 58 CEs, 34 CIs
- 75 CEs felt had to produce research
- Seen written promotion criteria
- 51 CE, 72 CI
- CIs met regularly with Division chiefs
- gt 10 protected time for scholarship
- 37 CE, 79 CI
48Looking Forward to PromotionWhat Matters?
- CE
- Clinical Research
- Written Scholarship
- Reputation
- Teaching Skills
- Curric Development
- Chairs of CAPT
- Teaching skills
- Clinical Skills
- Mentoring
- Coord Programs
- Reputation
Why the Differences? CE dont know
criteria? CAPT Chairs politically correct?
49Definitions
- Clinician Educator
- Primary pt care/teaching
- gt 50 time teaching lt 50 pt care w/o learners
- Research usually educational
- Clinician Investigator
- gt 50 time research
- lt 50 time pt care w/o learners
- gt 50 salary from grants
Beasley BW, Wright SM. JGIM 200318705-10
50Looking Forward to PromotionRecommendations
- Teaching portfolio
- Any/all data related to teaching
- Effectiveness as a clinician
- Know what is expected for promotion
- Mentors
- Meet with division chief every 6 months
- Create environment for scholarship
51Teaching PortfoliosAcad Med. 200479783-90
- Aspects
- Personal statement/philosophy for context
- Summarize major accomplishments/activities
- Summarized evidence regarding quality and
effectiveness of activities - Teaching scholarship is incomplete unless
communication to peers and other scholars
occurs (Beattie, Acad Med. 200075871-6.)
52Teaching Fellow
- Residents PGY 2, 3
- Ward supervision of Students
- Recommendation of Chief
- Brief CV
53Instructor
- Fellows
- Teaching in Clinic, Consult Service, or Physical
Diagnosis - Recommendation of Chief or Service Chief
- CV
not GIM fellows
54USUHS DOM Faculty Review
- Yearly faculty review by exec committee
- Teaching (activity sheet, student/resident
critiques) - Scholarship (CV)
- Service Contribution (school and hospital
committees)
55Integration of Clinician-EducatorsLevinson W,
et.al. Acad Med. 200075906-12
- Problems with current recognition system
- Reg/natl reputation requirement is unfair
- Lack of valid measures of teaching/pt care
- Lack of training opportunities
- Solutions
- Clinician-Educator Researcher Pathway
- Drop reputation and publication requirement
56Faculty Tracks
- USU no longer has modified titles, such as
Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine - Tenure and non-tenure tracks have same title
Associate Professor of Medicine (except for those
with prefixes)
57Level 1 Teaching
- Ability to provide the effective transfer of
knowledge and/or skills to medical, graduate,
postdoctoral students, postgraduate physician
trainees, faculty, other members of the
scientific and medical community and the general
public - Ability to show students how to think critically
and purposefully, broaden the students areas of
interests, and most importantly encourage and
help develop the skills for self-learning - Department teaching involving
- Presenting series of lectures covering one or
more topics - Primary instructor in a course, advising
students, attending or precepting on inpatient or
outpatient service,mentoring students and
fellows, seminar or journal club organizer, small
group or laboratory teacher - Coverage of specified curriculum content and of
the standard teaching load of the department - Meritorious teaching evaluations from students
and peers
58Level 1 Teaching
- Department teaching involving
- Presenting series of lectures covering one or
more topics - Primary instructor in a course, advising
students, attending or precepting on inpatient or
outpatient service,mentoring students and
fellows, seminar or journal club organizer, small
group or laboratory teacher - Coverage of specified curriculum content and of
the standard teaching load of the department - Meritorious teaching evaluations from students
and peers
59Level 2 Teaching
- Development/redevelopment of teaching materials
for students, continuing education courses and/or
faculty training - Writing clinical case material for teaching
- Successful supervision of postgrad students and
willingness to supervise major honors postgrad
research projects - Invitation to present Grand Rounds/seminars at
primary departments and other institutions - Invitations to present courses outside of primary
dept - Written documentation of novel techniques in
teaching on the delivery of care - Leadership roles in teaching (course director,
residency or fellowship director)
60Level 2 Teaching (2)
- Consistently receives outstanding teaching
evaluations or teaching awards, recognition as
outstanding role model for students - Develops innovative teaching methods such as
educational software, videotapes, packaged
courses, or workshops - Provides continuing education at local and
national meetings - Develops new educational materials
- Successfully runs regional continuing education
courses - Creates a new course or curriculum
61Level 3 Teaching
- Evidence of peer review and acceptance of new or
integrated knowledge through the dissemination of
the results - Publishes articles on health professional
education with emphasis on hypothesis-driven
research - Develops educational material in media other than
print (video, computer programs, Internet) that
demonstrate expanded peer recognition through
utilization by institutions, educators, and
clinicians outside of the USUHS.
62Level 3 Teaching (2)
- Receives favorable peer reviews or significant
adoptions of innovative published or circulated
instructional material. - A strong record of publications in health
professional education including but not limited
to methodology, outcome assessment, competency,
and curriculum reform. - Evidence of systematic experimentation on, or
scholarly analysis and evaluation of alternative
and innovative teaching approaches or materials,
such as the development of inclusive curricula. - Peer reviewed grant funding.
- Provides educational leadership by writing
syllabi, textbooks, or assuming an institutional
level policy making administrative role.
63Level 3 Teaching (3)
- Consistent participation in national educational
activities (e.g., Residency Review Committee,
programs sponsored by professional organizations,
re-certification, workshops and symposia). - Invitations to be a visiting scholar at another
institution. - An established reputation beyond the institution
as an innovative educator as evidenced by
external letters of reference and invitations to
lecture or demonstrate at national conferences on
teaching, organizing national meetings, serving
as a national consultant. on editorial boards of
journals or to serve on national or international
committees on teaching, curriculum, or
evaluation.
64Tenure Criteria
- Scholarship
- publications, expertise, reputation
- grants
- Contributions
- teaching
- service
- USU is typical in tenure rules
65Associate Professor of Medicine (Tenure)
- will have demonstrated the clear capacity for
sustained achievement and productivity in three
of the four areas of scholarship. - evidence of an established reputation beyond
the parent institution within the
discipline...area...specialty
66Associate Professor (Tenure)
- criteria for assistant professor PLUS
- sustained productivity as a scholar (papers,
grants) over several years (4 - 8yrs.) - national reputation
- supporting letters (tenure gt 4)
- personal letter on theme of scholarly work
67Research Portfolio
- papers, abstracts
- your contribution (if not first author)
- grant proposals
- ratings if unfunded
- documentation of reviewer, directorial status
68Scholarship in TeachingFincher R. et.al. Acad
Med. 200075887-94.
- Teachingcan be scholarly if appropriate
evidence is presented to show that defined
standards have been met. - Products Web-based materials, textbook
publications, curriculum units or teaching
modules, CME presentations, curricular change,
community education - Challenge provide the evidence its scholarly
69Scholarship in TeachingFincher R. et.al. Acad
Med. 200075887-94.
70Elusiveness of Scholarship of TeachingGlassick
CE. Acad Med. 200075877-90.
- To be scholarship, work (teaching) must
- Be made public
- Be available for peer review and critique
according to accepted standards - Be able to be reproduced and built on by other
scholars
Schulman L. The Scholarship of Teaching.
Change. 199931(5)11.
71Scholarship of ApplicationShapiro ED, Coleman
DL. Acad Med. 200075895-8.
- Application of clinical expertise does not
constitute scholarship it is when - Systematically assess effectiveness of techniques
- Communicate it to allow others to benefit
- Service is scholarship when
- Assess pt satisfaction and communicate it
- Common Aspect of Scholarship of Application
- Dissemination of useful, testable, reproducible
information to others
72Scholarship of ApplicationShapiro ED, Coleman
DL. Acad Med. 200075895-8.
- Problems
- Form of scholarship held in lower esteem
- Lack of training
- Lack of available funding, protected time
- Opportunities
- Already trying to assess Practice Based Learning,
Systems Based Practice - Report methods used
- Make it count twice